Viewing page 24 of 98

This transcription has been completed. Contact us with corrections.

Come here  izɑ:-gunō; wīzɑ
Go away  ndɑ:n-yē! hīdɑ!
give me  gibɑ:ni.
I will come to-morrow  mūngu-ngīzɑ
how do you do  wɑkōluɑ:; ɑbū ɑkōlɑ:;
I am well  ɑ:mī ngɑ: kōlɑ:.
how do you call this?  ndū-gŭi-ɑ:' inɑ:ni?
my father is dead  tɑ:tɑ: wɑ:fŏɑ
my mother is dead  mɑ:mɑ: uɑ:foɑ
come to-morrow  mūngu īzɑ.
when do you go?  (?)  kīzuɑ: kikī ūiyɑ:
I eat an orange  kuliɑ'mɑ mɑhoɑlē.
I drink water  nūnnɑ: mēiɑ
A thief- one who takes the things of another- kɑ'bɑ, iɑ'ku nyɑ'nye imbɑ'mbe ɑ'ba koɑ:o.
Who goes there?  ndɑ:uwiyē?
the child [[strikethrough]] chi [[/strikethrough]] cries  moɑnɑ'nte nke mūlimɑgū tambēkɑ. 

Transcription Notes:
Hints for transcribing the phonetic symbols in this document: 1. This document makes an important distinction between two different ways of writing the letter a (a vs. ɑ), even in the case of diacritic marks. DO NOT disregard this distinction. Enter the appropriate character if it appears without diacritics. For [[macron over "ɑ"]], enter "ɑ:". For [[macron over "a"]], enter "ɔ:". For [[breve "ɑ"]], enter "æ". For [[breve "a"]], enter "ă". 2. The apostrophe-like characters that appear above/just after some letters are stress marks that follow the stressed syllable. They can be represented with a single quote/apostrophe. 3. Some letters have what appears to be a vertical tilde underneath. These indicate nasal pronunciation but how they should be typed depends on the letter. Vowels can be represented by the tilde diacritic over that vowel except in the case of ɑ and ʊ. These can be represented as [[tilde "ɑ"]] and [[tilde "ʊ"]]. When this symbol appears under an "n" it represents the nasal "n" as in sang, and it should be entered as "ŋ", NOT "ñ" which represents a different sound. When it appears under a c, it is NOT a c-cedilla, but instead refers to the sh sound which is represented by the modern symbol "ʃ".